Protocol
Bitcoin Protocol Rules
The rules of the Bitcoin protocol are the rules that precisely define the Bitcoin system.
There are different classes of rule in the Bitcoin system including:
- Immutable rules
- Mutable rules
- Communication rules
Immutable Rules
The immutable rules are codified into bitcoin node clients and must be strictly adhered to in order to implement the Bitcoin specification in software [1]. They are a set of rules that define the format and constraints that transactions and blocks must follow. These include:
- The sum of the value of the inputs of a transaction must be greater than or equal to the sum of the values of the outputs
- The block subsidy will drop by half at a scheduled rate of every 210,000 blocks, starting with a subsidy of 5,000,000,000 satoshis from the genesis block
- The network will adjust the target for the difficulty of the Proof of Work needed for a valid block to maintain an approximate 10 minute block discovery rate
- Only blocks that add to the block chain formed by building upon the Genesis block are valid
- The structure of the Bitcoin database as a timestamp server validating chains of digital signatures
Additional immutable rules govern such things as:
- Transactions data formatting, including sizes of certain fields and their encoding schema
- Block structure and header information including sizes of certain fields and their encoding schema
- The Bitcoin scripting language and its specification
Forced changes to these protocol rules in the past have resulted in network splits and duplication of the Bitcoin database which created BTC which removed the requirement for Bitcoin to be a chain of digital signatures, and BCH which modified the timestamping aspect of the system.
The Bitcoin SV philosophy is that where aspects of these rules have been changed in the past they should be returned to be as close to the original rules as possible and then “set in stone”, will no further changes allowed enforced through Nakamoto Consensus.
Mutable Rules
Mutable rules are “optional” or “non-mandatory” rules that mining clients implement but are free to change at any time. Examples of these include:
- The maximum transaction memory usage rule which governs how much memory a transaction can consume during the execution of its script
- The maximum block-size rule
With these rules, miners tend to act as a collective, changing a particular rule all at once (e.g. maximum transaction memory limits and maximum block size). These changes do not require hard forks or scheduled network upgrades, with the settings that govern these changes available to miners through node client configuration tools. All that is required is a loose agreement between miners to change the settings across the network at a particular date and time.
This means that miners must be aware of the actions being taken by the rest of the network lest they find themselves rejecting transactions or blocks that a majority of the network is accepting and become stuck on a non-productive chain-tip while the remainder of the network move forward.
Local policies
These policies are “local” by definition. They apply to the instance of software that is running, they do not apply to the validation of blocks, or the transactions within a block. A block accepted from another miner may contain transactions that do not conform to local policy. Local policies include:
- The “minimum fee” rule, which specifies that the node will only accept and/or relay unconfirmed transactions that pay above a certain fee
- Dust rules which specify the smallest value output a transaction can contain that the node will accept and/or relay
- Rules relating to inbound and outbound connections on the network such as RPC responses, specific IP addresses to connect to and more.
Standard Policies
Common local policies that are used by a significant proportion of network nodes. They are defined as a "Standard" to facilitate common application across independent software implementations but it is important to note that it is not required that software implement or adhere to these policies. These include things such as the availability and types of RPC calls and connectivity to the wider network.
P2P Protocol
The P2P Protocol is a well defined method for Bitcoin nodes to communicate. The P2P Protocol can change and a re-implementation is planned for the future. Software can use any method of communication. A large amount of the innovation that scales Bitcoin SV is done by improving the peer-to-peer protocol.
See Also
References
[1] - https://github.com/bitcoin-sv-specs/protocol/blob/master/updates/genesis-spec.md